Bulletin of the American Physical Society
6th Joint Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics and the Physical Society of Japan
Sunday–Friday, November 26–December 1 2023; Hawaii, the Big Island
Session D10: Nuclear Structure II
9:00 AM–11:45 AM,
Wednesday, November 29, 2023
Hilton Waikoloa Village
Room: Kohala 3
Chair: Aaron Gallant, Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab
Abstract: D10.00006 : Beta Delayed Spectroscopy of 29F, observation of the first excited state of 29Ne*
10:15 AM–10:30 AM
Presenter:
James Christie
(University of Tennessee)
Authors:
James Christie
(University of Tennessee)
Miguel Madurga
(University of Tennessee)
Zhengyu Xu
(University of Tennessee Knoxville)
Robert Grzywacz
(University of Tennessee)
Philipp Wagenknecht
(University of Tennessee Knoxville)
Thomas T King
(Oak Ridge National Lab)
Shree Neupane
(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
Joseph Heideman
(University of Tennessee)
Aaron Chester
(Michigan State University)
Andrea Richard
(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
Kevin Siegl
(University of Tennessee)
James M Allmond
(Oak Ridge National Lab)
Rin Yokoyama
(University of Tennessee)
Jesse N Farr
(University of Tennessee)
Collaboration:
E19044 Collaboration
been well characterized in its north and west “shores.” The south-eastern “beaches” offer
intriguing physics where deformation and neutron dripline effects overlap, yet they remain
poorly known due to the difficulty in producing them in experimental facilities. In particular, if
standard ordering is restored at the dripline, it will suppress low-energy opposite-parity
intruders.
In this talk, I will present experimental work done at the
National Superconducting Laboratory as a part of the E19044 collaboration. A 48Ca beam
was fragmented to produce a cocktail beam of isotopes around Z=9, N=20 29F and
separated by mass using the A1900 spectrometer. The cocktail beam was implanted in a
YSO crystal, and the decay products were detected using 3 HPGe clovers for gamma rays
and 48 VANDLE bars for beta delayed neutrons.
This presentation will focus on beta-delayed gamma and neutron spectroscopy of 29F. We have observed for the first time a gamma transition at 174 keV. From the observed beta feeding we deduce it corresponds to a Gamow-Teller transition, which we interpret as the first excited state of 3/2+ spin parity. Our measurement supports a 3/2- 29Ne ground state, thus likely being in the island of inversion, as previously indicated by several reaction experiments (A. Revel 2023, N. Kobayashi 2016, H.N. Liu 2017)
*This research was sponsored in part by the Office of Nuclear Physics, U.S. Department of Energy, under Award No. DE-FG02-96ER40983 (UTK), and by the National Nuclear Security Administration under the Stewardship Science Academic Alliances programthrough DOE Award No. DE-NA0003899.
Follow Us |
Engage
Become an APS Member |
My APS
Renew Membership |
Information for |
About APSThe American Physical Society (APS) is a non-profit membership organization working to advance the knowledge of physics. |
© 2025 American Physical Society
| All rights reserved | Terms of Use
| Contact Us
Headquarters
1 Physics Ellipse, College Park, MD 20740-3844
(301) 209-3200
Editorial Office
100 Motor Pkwy, Suite 110, Hauppauge, NY 11788
(631) 591-4000
Office of Public Affairs
529 14th St NW, Suite 1050, Washington, D.C. 20045-2001
(202) 662-8700